femaleist

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English

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Etymology

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From female +‎ -ist coined in 1999 by Barbara Ehrenreich.

Noun

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femaleist (plural femaleists)

  1. One who acknowledges and celebrates the ways in which women are different from men (in addition to the obvious difference in reproductive organs).
    • 1999 March 1, Barbara Ehrenreich, “The Real Truth About The Female Body”, in Time:
      The femaleist premise could be summarized as: Yes, we are different—wanna make something of it?
    • 1999 April 4, Joan Ryan, “Men, Women, Apples and Oranges”, in The San Francisco Chronicle:
      “What my book does, I think, is say, Let’s look at ourselves and not feel defensive,”’ says Mill Valley writer Dianne Hale, author of “Just Like a Woman: How Gender Science Is Redefining What Makes Us Female” (Bantam), published last month. Hale and the authors of the two similar books have been described as “femaleists” rather than feminists.
    • 2000, Diane Passno, Feminism: Mystique Or Mistake?, →ISBN:
      The ad industry portrayed the role reversal that feminists have coveted for the past twenty years . . . the femaleist party line that women are more "manly" than men could ever hope to be!
    • 2003, Roger N. Lancaster, The Trouble with Nature: Sex in Science and Popular Culture, →ISBN:
      Even in her critique of evolutionary psychology — a book heralded by Barbara Ehrenreich as the "chief manifesto of the new 'femaleist' thinking" — Natalie Angier expresses just this sort of impatience with perspectives from the usual critics of bioreductivism (feminists, progressives, and perhaps especially social scientists).
    • 2006, Christopher Mark O'Brien, Fermenting Revolution: How to Drink Beer and Save the World, →ISBN:
      I am a “femaleist.”I think that beer, when at its best, empowers women.

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